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Not what I'm actually using but it's a good enough facsimile,
I should think. |
Good news,
I've found a new play thing to make art with. Not really new, to be true, but new it's new in that I see them with a new light. A light of excitement and desire that I had not seen in a long time in dealing with art materials. I'm speaking of... brushes. Simple ass brushes. Chinese brushes, to be exact. The kind that isn't like our beloved Pentel Pocket Brush Pens, nor our Kolinsky or Sables that cost a good deal, at least in comparison to some Chinese brushes (so you get what I'm talking about, a PPBP or good sables costs around $16 for the most part online in American stores and $20-25 in local stores, online and retail, in the Philippines WHILE Chinese brushes can go for as low as $0.25...).
This is where the BAD news comes in. I've been wasting my time with these beautiful brushes, very good brushes. None offer the interplay of sensitivity, price, and sharpness that I seek, that was until I (re)found my Chinese brushes.
Bored and stuck in my room due to heavy rains, I took up my old bottles of ink and just played around with them for a few hours. Oh those brushes were wonderful after some frustration with my pen nibs which refused to work. The brushes were consistently offering what I've long

been searching for while making do well enough with my usual kit of Pentel Pocket Brush Pen, Pentel Waterbrush (with its bristles swapped out for the Kuretake Waterbrush bristles and filled with a concentrated form of Higgins Carbon Black), Da Vinci Maestro, and my Staedtler Pigment Liner.
With these Chinese brushes I can also lay claim to the idea that I'm following in the footsteps of the legendary Philippine artists like Nestor Redondo, Alfredo Alcala, and the like who too used a Chinese-style brush in their own renowned illustrations and comics work. Ah... one day I'll draw like them. One day....
.jpg/1024px-Nestor_Redondo_(1118250566).jpg) |
Note the Chinese brush in the hands of the great Redondo. |
Some of the drawings that I've sketched lately and then inked. They came about from my usual morning figure drawing exercises which started to show their returns, at least according to some people in the art and comics discords that I hang out in sometimes.
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So that you, the hypothetical reader, might have at least some kind of a
comparison, these are purely graphite and figure drawing, no inking. |
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I really like these ones for some reason. It's probably because I really feel the Mignola in these sketches. |
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The PPBP+Waterbrush with ink sketches |
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Chinese brush inks |
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Credits to Line of Action and Quickposes for the reservoir of images that these were sketched from. |
I'm still new to the entire field of Chinese brush-constrained inking. Might be awhile to get used to but I should think it'd be worth it.
That's all for now. Thanks for reading, whoever you might be.
Sources:
https://img-new.cgtrader.com/items/186591/6d5cde7b3d/chinese-calligraphy-brush-pen-3d-model-max-obj-fbx-c4d-ma-mb.jpg
https://static2.jetpens.com/images/a/000/106/106220.jpg?mark64=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5qZXRwZW5zLmNvbS9pbWFnZXMvYXNzZXRzL3dhdGVybWFyay5wbmc&markalign64=dG9wLHJpZ2h0&markscale=19&q=90&s=3942bfcd93e57a6fd5ed35393e59febd
https://img0.etsystatic.com/055/0/9672239/il_570xN.729315700_luza.jpg
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c2/Nestor_Redondo_%281118250566%29.jpg/1024px-Nestor_Redondo_%281118250566%29.jpg